Sign In / Register
Make This My Home Page | Feedback |RSS
You are here: IE »   Story

College students use blogs to unite, promote

  • Print
  • Mail This Article
  • Comments
  • Add to favorites
  • Cristen Chinea, a senior at MIT, made a confession in her blog on the college website.

    “There’ve been several times when I felt like I didn’t really fit in at MIT,” she wrote. “I nearly fell asleep during a Star Wars marathon. It wasn’t a result of sleep deprivation. I was bored out of my mind.” Still, in other ways, Chinea feels right at home at the institute. As she wrote on her blog, a hallmate once told her that “MIT is the closest you can get to living in the Internet,” and Chinea reported, “IT IS SO TRUE. Love. It. So. Much.”

    Dozens of colleges — including Amherst, Bates, Carleton, Colby, Vassar, Wellesley and Yale — are embracing student blogs on their websites, seeing them as a powerful marketing tool for high school students, who are less interested in official messages and statistics than in first-hand narratives and direct interaction with current students.

    Ads by Google

    MIT’s bloggers, who are paid $10 an hour for up to four hours a week, offer thoughts on anything that might interest a prospective student. Some offer advice on the application process and the institute’s intense workload; others write about quirkier topics, like warm apple pie topped with bacon and hot caramel sauce or trying to set a world record in the game of Mattress Dominos.

    Not every admissions office has been so ready to welcome uncensored student writing.

    “A lot of people in admissions have not been eager for bloggers, mostly based on fears that we can’t control what people are saying,” said Jess Lord, dean of admissions at Haverford College, which plans to add bloggers this spring to help admitted students hear about campus life. “We’re learning, slowly, that this is how the world works, especially for high school students.”

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Comments
    Post comment

    Be the first to comment.

    Post a Comment
    Name:
    Email:
    Title:
    Maximum characters allowed     
    Comment:
    TERMS OF USE:
    The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
    I agree to the terms of use.